Tonight, while roaming the streets of Colonial Williamsburg with family I stopped into a local bookstore and picked up a copy of Saint Augustine's "Confessions". In the short time that I've been reading it I've been completely blown away. For your reading enjoyment I thought I'd take a moment and share an excerpt with you that will hopefully encourage and edify you as it did me when I first read it:
Vast are you, Lord, and as vast should be your praise - vast what you do; what you know beyond assaying. Yet man, a mere segment of what you made, strives to appraise you - man, confined by a nature that must die, confined by this evidence of his sin, the evidence that you rebuff the overweening, yet man would still appraise you, this mere segment of what you made. You prompt us yourself to find satisfaction in appraising you, since you made us tilted toward you, and our heart it unstable until stabilized in you.
Then help me, Lord, to recognize and understand what comes first, to call for you before appraising you, or to recognize you before calling for you. Yet how can one call for what one does not recognize? Without such recognition, one could be calling for something else. Or is calling for you itself the way to recognize you? Yet, how shall people call for one they do not believe exists? And how are they to believe it exists if no one proclaims it?
Still, those who seek the Lord shall appraise him, for by seeking him they find, and by finding they appraise. I shall seek you then, Lord, by calling for you, call for you by believing you exist; for you have been proclaimed to us, and it is my belief in you that calls out to you - the faith that is your gift to me, which you breathed into me by the humanity your Son assumed, taking up his mission of proclaiming you.
...good...no not good...great stuff
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